For millions of TV watchers Ricky Gervais will always be David Brent, the
chubby, garrulous and socially inept manager of cult BBC sitcom The Office.

With a second series in the offing, fans can hardly wait to see what Ricky's
monstrous alter ego will get up to next.

So it is not surprising that his
short run of stand-up shows at London's Soho Theatre sold out long before
opening night.

Having dispensed with Brent's goatee, Gervais cuts a noticably slicker, and
slimmer, figure on stage.

Ricky Gervais provokes "appalled laughter"

But his trademark brand of sneering humour has made the transition intact.

For while Animals purports to be a comic lecture on the animal kingdom ("the
bits David Attenborough left out of Life on Earth"), it is merely an excuse
for this self-styled "gypo from Reading" to poke fun mercilessly at anything
that takes his fancy.

Beginning with a black-and-white film of lions and lionesses mating in the
wild, the tone is quickly set once the "French" narrator begins making
misogynistic remarks at how the female of the species teases the male.

And any pretence at serious discussion is banished once and for all when
Gervais reveals his notion of "the most destructive creature on earth" -
giant gorilla King Kong.

Having wasted many hours watching the Discovery Channel, he says, "ask me
anything about sharks and Nazis".

Apparently the former are by far the more
fearsome predator: "a shark would have found Anne Frank in a second."

Jeremy Spake from Airport fame comes in for abuse

His cruellest jibe is reserved for Stephen Hawking, whom Gervais
believes is "pretentious" because "he comes from Kent but speaks in an
American accent".

Throughout the hour-long show, Gervais continually baits his audience with
misanthropic, homophobic and blasphemous remarks, provoking gasps of
appalled laughter.

A whistle-stop tour through the Book of Genesis allows him to compare God to
illusionist David Blaine and the Garden of Eden to "the rich side on Big
Brother".

Bestiality, paedophilia and cannibalism are some of the other topics to come
under the microscope.

We also learn that mermaids are "overrated", cows
can't handle stairs and elephants like to go swimming.

He saves the best for last, however, showing us drawings of "gay" animals as
detailed in Bruce Bagemihl's dubious study Biological Exuberance: Animal
Homosexuality and Natural Diversity.